Thanks to some red-hot tabloid photos, Rudy Giuliani will not be moving into the anthrax-plagued former home of the National Enquirer in Boca Raton, Fla., a company official said yesterday.

BioONE – a partnership between Giuliani and a hazardous-materials concern called Sabre Technical – had planned to clean and occupy building, which held the scandal sheet’s parent company, American Media Inc., until a bio-terror attack in 2001.

But after some wrangling over who controls an archive of millions of tabloid photos stored at the site, the deal has fallen through.

“Our headquarters will not be in the AMI building,” BioONE chief operating officer Karen Cavanagh said yesterday.

She said the decontamination of the Boca building – where mailed anthrax spores killed a photo editor in 2001 – went well.

But the photographers who took many of 5 million photos stored at the paper demanded that the developer who bought the building give them their work.

Cavanagh said that because of the dispute, BioONE got caught in the middle and was not able to decontaminate the photos.

They are still considered contaminated with weaponized anthrax, making the building unusable, she said.